Abstract

The Sentinel-3 mission is part of the Copernicus programme space segment and has the objective of making global operational observations of ocean, land and atmospheric parameters with its four on-board sensors. Two Sentinel-3 satellites are currently on orbit, providing near-daily global coverage. Sentinel-3A was launched on 16 February 2016 and Sentinel-3B on 25 April 2018. For the early part of its operation, Sentinel-3B flew in tandem with Sentinel-3A, flying 30 s ahead of its twin mission. This provided a unique opportunity to compare the instruments on the two satellites, and to test the per pixel uncertainty values in a metrologically-robust manner. In this work, we consider the tandem-phase data from the infrared channels of one of the on-board instruments: the Sea and Land Surface Temperature Radiometer, SLSTR. A direct comparison was made of both the Level 1 radiance values and the Level 2 sea surface temperature values derived from those radiances. At Level 1, the distribution of differences between the sensor values were compared to the declared uncertainties for data gridded on to a regular latitude-longitude grid with propagated pixel uncertainties. The results showed good overall radiometric agreement between the two sensors, with mean differences of ∼0.06 K, although there was a scene-temperature dependent difference for the oblique view that was consistent with what was expected from a stray light effect observed pre-flight. We propose a means to correct for this effect based on the tandem data. Level 1 uncertainties were found to be representative of the variance of the data, expect in those channels affected by the stray light effect. The sea surface temperature results show a very small difference between the sensors that could be in part due to the fact that the Sentinel-3A retrieval coefficients were also applied to the Sentinel-3B retrieval because the Sentinel-3B coefficients are not currently available. This will lead to small errors between the S3A and S3B retrievals. The comparison also suggests that the retrieval uncertainties may need updating for two of the retrieval processes that there are extra components of uncertainty related the quality level and the probability of cloud that should be included. Finally, a study of the quality flags assigned to sea surface temperature pixel values provided valuable insight into the origin of those quality levels and highlighted possible uncertainties in the defined quality level.

Highlights

  • The Sentinel-3 (S3) mission contributes to the Copernicus programme space segment, with the objective of making global, long-term observations of atmospheric, ocean and land parameters [1].There are four main instruments on-board the mission satellites: the Sea and Land Surface TemperatureRadiometer (SLSTR), the Ocean and Land Colour Instrument (OLCI); a dual-frequency Synthetic aperture Radar Altimeter (SRAL), and a Microwave Radiometer (MWR)

  • To summarise the average radiometric differences between Sea and Land Surface TemperatureRadiometer (SLSTR)-A and B, we considered a single orbit of night-side gridded data

  • A limited amount of data was made available for the SST analysis with SLSTR-A and SLSTR-B data provided for certain days in September and December 2018

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Summary

Introduction

The Sentinel-3 (S3) mission contributes to the Copernicus programme space segment, with the objective of making global, long-term observations of atmospheric, ocean and land parameters [1].There are four main instruments on-board the mission satellites: the Sea and Land Surface TemperatureRadiometer (SLSTR), the Ocean and Land Colour Instrument (OLCI); a dual-frequency Synthetic aperture Radar Altimeter (SRAL), and a Microwave Radiometer (MWR). The Sentinel-3 (S3) mission contributes to the Copernicus programme space segment, with the objective of making global, long-term observations of atmospheric, ocean and land parameters [1]. There are four main instruments on-board the mission satellites: the Sea and Land Surface Temperature. Two S3 satellites are currently on orbit, providing near daily global coverage. Sentinel-3A (S3A) was launched on 16 February 2016 and Sentinel-3B (S3B) on 25 April 2018. Both satellites have a nominal design life of 7.5 years. Two follow-on satellites, models C and D, are in preparation to replace model A and B, so as a whole, the mission is planned to provide 20 years of continuous data

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